Ralph Waldo Trine (October 26, 1866 – November 8, 1958) was an American philosopher, author, and teacher. He wrote many books on the New Thought movement. Trine was a close friend of Henry Ford and had several conversations with him about success in life.
Born September 9, 1866,[1] in Mount Morris, Illinois,[2] Trine was the son of Samuel G. Trine and Ellen E. Newcomer.[3] He attended public school, and after graduating from high school at the age of 16 he began work as a farmer and lumberjack.[4] Later he worked as a bank teller for a time before going to college.[5]
Trine attended the University of Wisconsin in his early twenties and shows in the 1891 yearbook that covered 1889/90 and their alumni magazine of 1900.[6] In his mid twenties he attended Knox College in Illinois and graduated receiving a Master of Arts degree in 1891.[4] He then attended Johns Hopkins University studying history, social science, and political science where he concurrently worked as a journalist for the Boston Daily Evening Transcript.[3][7][8] Trine earned a large cash prize for an essay he wrote in the late 1800s on how education lowered crime.[9] He became involved in social problems related to animals and became director of the American Humane Society and the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.[9]
In 1892, Trine was both a student and teacher of rhetoric at Emerson College where he had an influence on E. W. Kenyon, who went on to become the father of the Word of Faith Movement.[10]
Trine moved to Mount Airy, New York area where he built a cabin when he was 30 years old. Situated near a grove of pine trees, the property provided an ideal environment for his writing talents. At this time he met his future wife Grace Hyde an author of poetry and plays. Living in the area for many years, while raising their only child, Robert, they became involved in metaphysical seminars that were held at Lake Oscawana. Later they moved to California and continued writing. He liked raising fruit trees as a hobby, which became a labor of love.[7]
Trine was influenced by writings of Emmet Fox, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Drummond.[3][8] Trine's book "What All the World's A-Seeking" amplified on ideas and concepts Drummond brought up originally in his book, "The Greatest Thing in the World and Other Addresses". Trine's primary work, "In Tune with the Infinite" was published in 1897.[11] It has been translated into some twenty languages and millions of copies have been sold.[3][12] It was a favorite of Queen Victoria and Janet Gaynor. Henry Ford attributed his automobile business and financial success to ideas he picked up from Trine's book.[7][13][14] He gave away copies of Trine's book to executive industrialists he knew.[15][16] Ford considered Trine an old friend and had several intimate conversations with him about life and success.[3][17][18] He attributed many aspects of his success in life directly to these talks with Trine.[3][19][20][21][22][23][24]
Trine was a philosopher and teacher besides being the author of many books related to the New Thought movement.[3] He was introduced to the movement in the late nineteenth-century and was an advocate in the early twentieth-century of the related ideas.[3] He was one of the first of its representatives to write books on it.[3] His writings had an influence on other religious people including Ernest Holmes, a pioneer of Religious Science.[25] Trine's books of the early twentieth-century on New Thought ideas have promoted and sold more than any other of this genre.[7] The basic principles that Trine wrote about were later published by other self-help authors like Napoleon Hill, David Schwartz and Brian Tracy.[26]
Trine received an honorary Doctorate of Laws degree in 1938.[27] He and his wife retired to a retirement community for religious professionals in 1955.[28]
Trine married Grace Steele Hyde in Mohawk, New York, in 1898.[3][29][30] She was a graduate of Curry College in 1897 and wrote poetry and plays.[29][31] They had one child, Robert, born 1906.[32]
Trine died in 1958 in Claremont, California, at the age of 92.[2][8]
American artist Kathryn Woodman Leighton painted a portrait of Trine in the early 1930s.[33] This painting was given to Knox College by his widow in 1960.[33] A 50th anniversary edition of In Tune With The Infinite – Fullness of Peace, Power and Plenty was published in 1947.[3] Bobbs-Merrill published a commemorative book The Best of Ralph Waldo Trine in 1957.[3]
He wrote more than a dozen books, writing into his 70s.[8][34]